Happy Monday, mes enfants, if such a thing is possible.
It seems that we are in the business of paying protection money to squirrels now. When I mentioned them last ()and I never did post the photos), they were still cutesy little fluffy things and how we smiled at their antics. Well, they still are. Unfortunately they are as opportunistic and lazy as they are athletic and hungry.
Not being content merely to find increasingly amusing ways of getting on to the tray bird feeder, they have demolished over the course of the weekend, four fat balls that we put out in the other feeder. I don’t mind them scoffing the peanuts and stuff, but really, the fat balls are supposed to be for the exclusive use of our little feathered friends. We have a couple of bluetits and some chaffinches that regularly visit the garden hoping for food and there is a solitary robin that sits forlornly on its favourite branch on the cherry tree watching wistfully as the furry thugs hog the bird table, demolish the stocks of nuts and scatter the seeds – the bit the robin would like – everywhere. He would also like some of the worms from the fat balls too, I expect, but he’s out of luck for now at least.
The birds do get some of the food, but by and large they are sidelined by the squirrels, which frankly, could feed themselves adequately elsewhere. It’s not so late in the season that food is in short supply.
I know we’ve arrived in the land of the homeowner/gardener when I stop to think that we are indulging ourselves in that age-old game of ‘beat the squirrel’.
Is there a club? Do you have membership cards and decoder rings? Can you send me details?
It seems that we are in the business of paying protection money to squirrels now. When I mentioned them last ()and I never did post the photos), they were still cutesy little fluffy things and how we smiled at their antics. Well, they still are. Unfortunately they are as opportunistic and lazy as they are athletic and hungry.
Not being content merely to find increasingly amusing ways of getting on to the tray bird feeder, they have demolished over the course of the weekend, four fat balls that we put out in the other feeder. I don’t mind them scoffing the peanuts and stuff, but really, the fat balls are supposed to be for the exclusive use of our little feathered friends. We have a couple of bluetits and some chaffinches that regularly visit the garden hoping for food and there is a solitary robin that sits forlornly on its favourite branch on the cherry tree watching wistfully as the furry thugs hog the bird table, demolish the stocks of nuts and scatter the seeds – the bit the robin would like – everywhere. He would also like some of the worms from the fat balls too, I expect, but he’s out of luck for now at least.
The birds do get some of the food, but by and large they are sidelined by the squirrels, which frankly, could feed themselves adequately elsewhere. It’s not so late in the season that food is in short supply.
I know we’ve arrived in the land of the homeowner/gardener when I stop to think that we are indulging ourselves in that age-old game of ‘beat the squirrel’.
Is there a club? Do you have membership cards and decoder rings? Can you send me details?
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-15 10:46 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-11-15 12:06 pm (UTC)I think you're taking my comments entirely the wrong way.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-15 12:44 pm (UTC)What there will be, if ever we can devise it (and become millionaire celebs in the process for succeeding where the rest of the world has failed), will be a method of feeding the birds so that the squirrels only get a share, not the lot, of the food. The little buggers should be able to get some of their own from elsewhere (of course, they think they are already...).
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-16 08:51 am (UTC)I have to say I'm never a fan of using the idea of things being 'natural' as an argument...it's pretty hard to follow through for very long before it ties itself in knots completely - how does one qualify what is natural and what is not ? Coppiced wood is far more species rich than woodland left to it's own devices but it relies on human intervention is that natural ? What about moorland ? What about cornfields ? Hay meadows ? All these environments either don't exist or are smaller and poorer without constant human intervention, species are adapted to live in them and suffer when they aren't maintained.
If any species follows it's instincts it does what it needs to survive and if their is no outside check it any species with a decent rate of breeding will ultimatley damage itself and its environment (its not just humans that do this despite what some try and claim), that could be termed 'natural' but is it a good thing ? Deer need their numbers keeping down and if people can then use those culled deer as a source of meat and eat less nastily farmed stuff then thats 2 birds with ones stone for me.
In the case of Squirrles, yes humans screwed up introducing the greys but is it a good thing if they wipe out reds ? If culling them protects the reds is that a good or bad thing ?
Sorry Bryan, I've hijacked your LJ...
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-16 09:54 am (UTC)I'm just starting out with doing a bit of professional gardening and my speciality is wild/native planting and one of the hardest things to tell people who want 'a wildlife garden' is that doesn't me a low work garden, it usually means the opposite : )
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-16 12:36 pm (UTC)Let us not speak of cat troubles, we have brilliant insect life but birds...no chance.
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Date: 2010-11-15 03:32 pm (UTC)Naughty little tree rats.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-15 03:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-11-15 11:26 pm (UTC)